Materials List – Warre Hive Construction Guide

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Cloth

The Warre hive has an insulating box called a quilt that sits on top of the uppermost hive box underneath the roof. To the bottom of the quilt is fastened a permeable cloth. This cloth holds the insulating material inside the quilt. At the same time, the cloth allows the hive to breath through the quilt.

The cloth can be cut from any number of permeable fabrics. Burlap, hessian, and cotton canvas all work well. Most of these fabrics can be purchased at a local craft or fabric supply store. As you can see in the picture, I have used cotton canvas. You will need about 4.5 to 5 square feet of cloth for each hive. That is about 1.5 yards of canvas when cut from a 60″ roll. When I purchased it, the cotton canvas cost about $4.19(US) per yard.

Insulating Material

Before you place the quilt on the top of the hive, it needs to be filled with an insulating material such as peat moss, pine shavings, chopped hay or sawdust. You will need a couple of pounds per Warre hive.

There may be other types of insulating material that would work well in a Warre hive. Feel free to experiment. Just be sure that the material you use does not pack down in the quilt but instead stays light and fluffy. This will ensure good air circulation and will make it easy for the bees to air condition their hive.

Finish

Choosing the finish for your Warre hive is the best part of the building process! From linseed oil to paint to stain…the choices are many. Linseed oil makes a nice natural finish. White paint is often used on ten frame hives. I have also seen some Warre hives that have been stained with a natural stain and then painted with designs of flowers and bees.

Beware of finishes that block the flow of air and moisture through the wood such as varnish or shellac. These finishes will not allow moisture out of the hive and your bees could asphyxiate. Another problem these finishes can cause is an excessive buildup of mold inside your hive.

One novel finish is a mixture of linseed oil and beeswax. This mixture is put over a heat source and slowly heated. Then the hive components are dipped into the hot solution. Some people opt for painting the hot mixture on to the hive parts with a paintbrush. After drying for a day or two, the hive is ready to assemble and use.

41 responses to “Materials List – Warre Hive Construction Guide”

Thanks so much for all the work you’ve put into these plans! I built a KTBH last year after much work synthesizing the various plans I found around on the web. My bees are still hanging in there, but for cold Montana winters I’m not sure KTBH are the way to go–too much cold box around the bees. Seems like Abbe Warre’s might be better. I’m just going to follow your plans for at least one new hive–and I’ll duly report on how it works! Thanks again.

Charles – You’re very welcome. Since you are in Montana you might want to try using wood a little thicker than 3/4″. Perhaps 1″ or so. That should insulate your bees a bit more. I look forward to hearing how your Warre hive works for you!

Margie – Thanks for your input! That is a good idea to use straw bales as a windbreak. I did that myself one winter. I had some hives that were in the path of too much direct north wind. Hay bales did the trick!

One hive (6 boxes, roof, skirt, floor) out of 1×10 red cedar–which was pricey ($75) but gorgeous. All the pine I could find (tried 2 lumberyards) was lousy. Also, I had an old sheet of good thick plywood that I made into a hive. I doubt that’ll last too long, but figured I’d try it–in case I can catch a swarm. In a 3rd lumberyard today I finally found great cheap 1×10 pine–so I’ll probably build another out of that.

Two quick questions. With the sides of the Warre TBH being vertical verses being V shaped is there more of a tendency for the bees to attach combs to the side of the hive, creating difficulty with removing the Top Bars? Also by what means are the hive boxes secured to the one above and the one below, or are they just stacked one on top of the other without any securing of the boxes to one another?

Nick… Thank you so much for the plans, they’re awesome! Quick question, I have a friend that cut and planed wood for the hives (we’re starting 3), he had the plans and knew the max width needed was 8 1/4. I think the planing has made the width around 8 inches — how precise do we need to be with the measurements (this would affect the height of the hive body and the roof)? Thank you…

Also any suggestions for transferring nucs? Can I just put the box on top, close any extra spaces and let them build down?

Hi Joe, boiled linseed isn’t what it used to be. There are chemicals added these days to make it “fast drying” that is not good for the bees. Raw is the way to go… you should be able to get raw linseed oil at your local hardware store. Last time I looked my local Home Depot carried it in the paint dept.

NICK AND MATTHEW, thanks I just got back from a 5 store stop,,, Ace hardware gave me a gallon last one in the store not on the inventory list no price no charge COOL, everybody had boiled linseed but no thanks RAW is the way to go,, Thanks ,,,,Joe so I know what I’m doing tomorrow

Hello! I would love to build a hive. I have looked in my shed and have a heap of one inch wood but it is about 1.5 cm short of the 21cm depth of the boxes . Would I be able to use this without effecting the bees too much or should I add the extra need to make 21cm? Thank you for such detailed plans!

Hi Nicole! Glad you like the website :-) I don’t feel that a 21cm difference in depth will make any difference whatsoever. Plus, building them with a single piece of wood rather than 2 together will be much stronger in the long run.

Am I missing something here? It says that 1″x12″ are around a dollar or two? Where at? Because Ive called almost every store around here that carry 1×12’s and the cheapest I got was $17 for ONE board. And it was only a 1x12x8. I could only imagine what a 1x12x10(or 12) would cost. I would love to be able to build a Warre hive, but there is no way with the cost like that.

Hi Holly, thanks for your comment. I think you may have missed the dollar or two “per board foot” so you’ll need to multiply that out to the length of board. You also have to keep in mind that the price of lumber is always changing and wood is kind of expensive right now. You’ll still spend less buying the material and building it yourself than buying hive bodies from a retailer…

2×12 boards are cheaper. A year ago I went to Parr lumber and bought enough wood for a hive with $30. Forget about cedar just use pine or Douglas fir or whatever is cheapest as long as the wood is straight and you treat it with raw linseed oil (which is hard to find but possible) it will last for years. Doug Fir is on the heavy side but will last theoretically longer than pine. Good luck!

hi im interested to know if i would be able to use pallet wood to build my hive box and used the raw linseed oil.I would like to repurpose things people get rid of regularly.Ive never had a hive but am very interested in starting one this year if its not to late.im in Hopkinsville Ky now but want to have the bee hive up and running in Oneida Tenn this summer.Any help or advice is so apreciated as there is so much to learn.

Hi Karen, thanks for posting. I like to reuse and recycle what I can too :-) Dimensionally, the wood used on most pallets is only 3 1/2 inches wide so you’ll have to be creative in how you build them, creativity is the best part of recycling though…Be careful not to use any materials that have been treated with chemicals or have had chemicals spilled on them, pressure treated wood wouldn’t be good for the bees!

What would change in these plans if I used 1×10’s? Could I just buy 1 1×12 for the gables etc? I bought a stack of 1×12’s and am wondering if I have wasted $ but would like to know for my next build. also, Is there a printable .doc or pdf of this build? You have done a great job and I want to share it with people!

Hi Jesse, glad you enjoyed the plans. I don’t have anything to download, I prefer folks visit the site. I don’t see why you couldn’t use 1×10 you’ll just have to do some math to figure out the new dimensions…

Hi Jesse, I don’t. I’ve built both, the summer feeder quite a few times. It’s really easy, think of it as a short hive box that goes above the floor that has one side as well as top and bottom open. The tray makes up the open side of the box and rests on the floor of the hive. The Autumn feeder is much more complex. When I get some time I’ll build both and snap some pictures. It would be a great new post :-)

Yes, please do. I would love to see that! I will wait to build them till I see your instructions. I really am having a hard time conceptualizing them. Maybe its because these are my first hives. I will try to figure out how to use my lang entrance hives that I have. Its odd, I had two full lang hives given to me but the warre seems so much more compeling after all my research.